The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 15, 1934, Page 6

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Page Six Eight Arrested in Police Raid WORKE RS’ he Daily Worker Medical Advisory Board : = \ OUR HAT’'S Sixty thousand raised to make pos . THE RING Ss must be three- le the edition Daily. We, of the Medical Advisory Boar keenly aware of the importa nis drive. We know full well the necessity of bringing the Daily greater num- bers to the ~w g men and women of the United States. At our last m we discussed the part h nust play in building We examined ly for the pur- But we real- part of our do our whole job, we st put our collective shoulder t he wheel, and help put the drive across. To this end, we have set our quota at $3,500. A Committee has been appointed to this amount is not only exceeded. re, in a spirit of Socialist competition, we challenge the other columns of the Daily. We are aware that Sender Garlin, Helen Luke, David Ramsey, Harry Gannes, Del and Burck are competitors to be taken seriously. But formidable as ovr Comrade-columnists are, we are certain that 30 doctors armed with pen and pill-box, will make worthy Socialist competitors. Tn order to make the race keener we will assume the responsibility of ng shape. As a point of fact now ng 14 cylinders for Comrade Garlin. And all of our other com- rade-competitors will be kept hit- ting on all sixteen 1 that this is to be competition, we hought it best to give ourselves 4 lift Between us. we mustered $62.50. Only $3,437.50 to go. Your doctors ask for your sup- port. Help build the Daily! Con- tribute through “Workers’ Health”! ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS Flat Feet L. K., New York.—The condition you complain of is due to a fat- tening of the foot. This is frequent in people who do lots of walking or who stand for a long period of time. It more common in women, be- ci of high heels which shift the in the process of re-| DAILY WORKER, HEALTH eee Boss Wor Gives Soldiers By a Textile Worker Correspondent CONCORD, N. C.—Mr. C. A. Can- non, president of the Cannon chain of mills of Concord and Kannapolis, has bought five cars for the soldiers to use here, also is giving gas and oil for the cars. He is bribing the sol- diers by buying their cigarettes and ning about 800 workers quit their job in Kannapolis when they found guards around the mills. This shows the South has the right spirit and | we urge all the workers to quit their | jobs and help us win as this is a fight for the right to live and have a decent living for our children, | Kannapolis, join in the strike and let the Southern mill owners know that they are liars when they say |that the South will not strike. | eR weight of their bodies to the front | part of the foot. The skin under | the forefoot becomes hard and cal- | loused and as a result walking is| on-untonMen uncomfortable and painful. | 7, The treatment consists of re- al ut o moving the hardened or calloused skin. This is easily done in a| . physician's office and is entirely | iL b Mi ll painless. A corrective orthopedic |~ 4€ a non t shoe with a metatarsal pad inserted | in the shoes very often completely kers Answer _ Mass Picket Lines | By a Worker Correspondent | Providence R. I. | | Om account of thetr good work in behalf of the general textile | strike, eight leading comrades | were arrested when the C. P. headquarters were raided by the police. The C. P. of Providence has been active In pulling out | mills in Pawtucket and Olynville. | This is the second fascist attack | on the working class Rhode Is- | land. The first one was when they called out the National | Guardsmen to break the strike in Saylesville, where three work- ers were already killed and many | wounded. The workers of R. I. MurrayGivesNRA Credit Injunctions Fail to Halt Pickete—C. P. Pushes | Fight for Strike Demands anything they want. Thursday eve- | oe vB must fight against these fascist attacks upon the workers, In the face of the guards the workers have formed mass picket lines | and are keeping out scabs. In Pawtucket injunctions are being. passed to keep the workers from picketing the mills as in the case of the Hope Webbing mill and the Acme mill. But the workers will continue to picket in spite of | them. In spite of this attack upon them the Communist Party of Rhode Island will continue to light harder than before in order to help the textile workers win their demands, W YORK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1934 2,000 Greet C. P. Speakers Cars as Bribe Police Attack With In Providence By a Worker Correspondent PROVIDENCE, R. I—We had a meeting called by the Communist | Party Monday night in the Charles | Street Section (Italian, we have one there every week). It was the big- gest meeting we ever held there. Most of the people are unemployed or textile workers. We had between 1,500 and 2.000 people. A very en- thusiastic meeting. The cops have been trying to stop us from meeting there in the last few weeks. But they did not dare do anything that night. After the meeting we were ap- proached by two textile workers (brothers), who were working in the Hope Webbing Co., a narrow fabric plant on Main Street, Pawtucket. They worked in the dye house with about 40 workers. The mill is unor- ganized. It has around 400 working. They all went on strike yesterday, except the dye house workers. The dye house is in the rear of the plant and is a separate building. These} two workers said, “The men want to go on strike, but no pickets came down and there was nobody to start the walkout.” It seems that’ the pickets did not know there was a dye house in the rear so no one went there. He said that even if we could on Communist Headquarters in R. I. PARTY LIFE Daily Worker Paves Way | For United Strike Action Colorado Farmers Build Communist Party After “Red Scare” Is Raised Party Built among Farmers in Colorado In our town the Party was weak and had no connections in the U. T. W. when the strike hit us.| As farmers in a dry farming dise We decided that the Daily Worker trict, among canyons, sage brush was our best bet as a vanguard. We and cedars, it has been a problem immediately increased our order for us as to how we can demon- from 25 to 100 a day. We sent our|strate in order to build up the best comrade to the picket lines to| Party. About a year ago we built sell Daily Workers. The first day|@ Farm Holiday Association of\ 95 he sold 40 on the‘ picket line in| per cent of this community, wi addition to the regular route sales. | Signed up under the demands fof The U. T. W. organizer was havy-| the Farmers National Committiee ing trouble getting workers out of Of Action, and were getting aloi the mills due to lack of prepara-| Nicely until all at once the red. tion. Our comrades invited him to} Scare started, and to settle it all speak at an outdoor solidarity |@ Baptist preacher threw a bomb- meeting organized by our unem-| shell into our last meeting by an ployed organization. He spoke along | attack on the reds. So we gathered with the section organizer of the| together our scattered forces, and Party and the District Organizer of | built the Communist Party. Since the Y.C.L., who came into town as| We are aware of the fact that we the meeting was going on. We) have to have something to build called for a mass turn-out to close| around, we decided to come out the mills. The next morning it | With a straight Communist County rained and the turn-out was not so| ticket for this fall election. good. Theat afternoon we had a| We happen to be on the main demonstration of unemployed Survey for the military highway workers and strikers in front of the | from the Gulf of Mexico to Puget big mill. | Sound and a contract has been let uf hi ildir = Saturday hightiwe had a mbar or the building of five and one. ‘ zs : | | . 3 half miles of this road through hera reel car ‘nocialint rivals in| relieves “the (discomfort: | By a Textile Worker Correspondent e is ° | get a half dozen people to picket the ine on 2 ore ete steps in Ee | for the sum of $92,000. Bessie | LEBANON, N. H.—The two mills or alns on ] t place in the morning that no one |}* Strike, T am writing tote on |this work was coming up, a great jin this town have struck. The will go in. Sundas, Tomorrow the tying Smoke screen was laid for the un- a American Woolen Co. mill was or-| The Communist Party promised UMA ill eae te eae ise employed. Since we have no tele- iT N Ah H E H O M E ganized and came out. The Lebanon ° 2 | them that at least three of us would |Stysron. Wi Conn aic—We | phones, we sent out cars through Woolen Co. mill, a small indepen- ainst ew ea oO 1¢ be there and we would try to get 3 | these canyons, and saw to it that dent company mill, has always been pickets from the front of the mill at| Wrong Method of Selling Daily | this smoke was raised. By HELEN LUKE non-union. The strikers picketed |6:30 am. We did this Tuesday Worker es sad poate ee ree mass § this miss for several days, passing out! py a Mine Worker Correspondent | struggles of the miners between the | Morning and workers did not g0/ Now we have contacts, we are| aie off gran aie ba cesar _What! What's this? Has every- Can You Make °’Em leaflets urging the workers to strike. | JOHNSTOWN Pa.—Campaigning | Years 1927 and 1933. Ot course, there |into work, The place is now almost |showing the face of the Party, we \the unemployed that the work is t bédy in town decided to wash a The picket line increased in size| “i a ill be th s- |is a reason for this silence. To dis-| ll closed down except for a few|have a united front in action, and be a “Power” job, and that ine pillow case and hang it on the front Yourself? each day and finally the ipaased mr mperreesta ie sainers ‘be. | CUSS these struggle, Murray would girls in the main plant. are selling our 100 Daily Workers.| main and Reis, ere fire-escape or balcony to dry? Ah—| no. No, it isn’t the family wash after all. After a second glance we see that there’s lettering on them thar sheets. New York's east sub-contractors—and a We also send. a comrade into a/few business men—are the only nearby mill town to make connec- | Ones that will benefit. While this tions and sell Daily Workers. The|Gemonstration was going on we that be” saw to it that the forces} | of “law and order” were set to guard | ‘Ween now and December. On the e vi i i jone hand, Czar Lewis, demagog | the picket Tine against out of town |ygiray and Co, will be continuously | trouble-makers. | We had another meeting in the same place Thursday night. have to reveal to the miners just what side of the fence Lewis and} Co. are on. We miners well know | that through the betrayals and| Pattern 1976 is available in sizes 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12. Size 4 takes; SIX WILLIAMSPORT SILK MILLS side tenements have burst into a white bloom l%e a cherry tree in spring. But this blossoming does not gladden our hearts for it is just a tory storm of republican and dtmocratic fortune for sheetcloth, paint and printing, not to mention cikars and beer. But that’s a mere trifle. When thie Democratic auto parade wound through the streets the other night, with red flares, shouting, and all horns raucously bellowing, the pan- demonium was such that before we got to the window we thought New York must be on fire. If the rev- olutionary workers were to make stich a racket we'd be arrested for disturbing the peace, disorderly conduct, arson, treason, sedition, and riot at least. Money is plainly flowing freely in wild campaigns of propaganda (for election) by the two major capital- ist parties, and what’s even more significant, their bandwagons are Tunning around with slogans such as “for unemployment and social iasurance” and “decent housing at low cost” and others demagogically borrowed—but why be so polite?— stolen straight off the revolu- tionary workers’ vanguard, the Communist Party. We have, them on the run. (Cheerio!) .But there’s one slogan they have not snitched off us yet, and it is the demand for social, economic, and political equality for women, with equal wages for equal work. Only the Communist Party is a fighting Party backing up such de- mands by militant and constant struggle, not only just before election but all the year round. Only the Communist Party repre- sents the interests of the woman black and white, who works for wlages on a living, whether she be factory worker, farmer, domestic worker or professional. -And September is the fifteenth anniversary of the Party. Let us celebrate and greet this birthday. The concluding paragraph of an article in the Working Woman Magazine tells how: :“Working Women, the program offered you by the Communist Party is your program. Celebrate the fifteenth anniversary of the Communist Party by joining its ranks Get other working women td*join. That is the best way to weld the ranks of the workers in their fight for freedom and a hap- pier world.” 244 yards 36 inch fabric. TIllus- trated step-by-step sewing instruc- | boosted by their henchmen. On the But no fiying squads of pickets| other hand, these social-fascist from out of town showed up, but| leaders of the U.M.W.A. will be tions included. workers to strike was about to die, the pickets began an outburst of ap- plause and hand-clapping. The non- union workers had struck! They have since been organized. It is also reported that the Hart- ford (Vt.) mill (non-union), has struck. The Quechee & Dewey mill | from White River Junction, Vt., and all highways surrounding them are being heavily patrolled by all sorts of heavily armed police and guards forbidding the public to use certain public highways. They have suc- ceeded in turning back cars of pickets who approached the mills from other towns and cities. They don’t, even trust the “big shots” from distant places in passing police lines. Sead FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in coins or stamps (coins preferred) |for this Anne Adams pattern. Write | plainly name, address and style |number. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE. Address orders to Daily Worker Pattern Department, 248 W. 17th St., New York City. SE cbhict by Clarence A. Hathaway Alexander Bittelman writes the Analyzes Forces in the Textile Strike introduction to “Communists in the Wextile Strike-An Answer to Gorman, Green & Co.” a new pamphlet ‘by C. A. Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker. The pamphlet is a vigorous and clear-cut analysis of the present ‘struggle of the textile workers, the maneuvers of the leaders of the United Textile Workers Union and the attempts of the Roosevelt gov- ‘ernment to kill the strike by arbitration. +A limited edition of this important pamphlet is being published. It Js urgent that copim ‘be placed in the hands of textile workers threugh- ‘out the strike zone. + ‘The price of the pamphlet is two cents a copy; $1.50 for 100 copies; 33.50 for 250 copies; $6.50 for 500 copies, and $12 for 1,000 copies, .Xork City. ri Rush your orders at once to the Daily Worker, 30 E. 13th St., New Free Herndon and Scottsboro Boys! 3 “It pleased me greatly to have received your letter today if I did receive unpleasant news a few minutes before. It didn’t weaken my courage and faith whatever so long as I | know you will stick by me... .” Letter from Haywood Patterson, Kilby Prison, June 29, 1994, International Labor Defense . Room 430, 80 East 11th St. iNew York City I contribute $......60...+...for maB TA se $15,000 §SCOTTSBORO-HERNDON EMERGENCY FUND $15,000 the Scottsboro-Herndon Appeals this strike, however. That is the strikers as a general rule have strong faith in Roosevelt, Green, to a lesser extent even Hugh John- son, although your correspondent believes Johnson's popularity has waned considerably. NOTE: We publish letters from coal and ore miners and from ofl field workers every Saturday. We urge workers in these fields to write us of their conditions of work and of their struggles to organize. Please get your letters to us by Wednes- day of each week. The Banjo Trail What has gone before: One dark summer night, Ted and Davy fishing. @ group of men. They listen. The men are waiting to kidnap Al Sherman, their father, a militant farmer. Sherman walks down the road with his friend. They are overpowered and taken in the car. But, unseen in the darkness, Ted and Davy Jump on the back and hold fast to the spare tire. Miles of the tree-lined road whiz- zed by, past meadows and a few scattered farm houses, till they met a dirt back-road which crossed the highway. Again the car switched to the left. What the car had done was to make an almost complete circle around a_ thickly wooded range of tall hills. Now the road led in towards these hills. It went fairly straight for a while, then branched off to the right on its winding way. But straight ahead, a narrow road climbed the steep side of the hill. The car started up boldly, then with gears shifted, it slowly crawled up the rocky path. At a widened bend of the road, the driver swung the car way over to make a sharp turn. Then along- side the mountain, the road climbed steadily higher. On the right, they passed the Benson place, the house burned to the ground. After passing through a field, the road ended in the backyard of the old Hollenbeck place. The house, partly hidden by tall maples, was dark, It was unoc- cupied, one of the many farms sold at auction. The car drove through the yard and stopped at a low gate, where an overgrown path led still farther up the mountain. Before the car came to a halt, Ted and Davy jumped off and hid be- hind a tree, a safe distance away. They watched while the men got out of the car. They saw them roughly push along their father and Don Elliot, whose arms had been tied. “They're going up to Zac Davis’ place,” whispered Ted. Zac Davis was an old farmer who had lived alone on the mountain side for forty years. Last winter he had died here, alone. Now his few acres of poor Jand and ramshackle house remain- ed deserted. It was just what Fowler and his gang wanted, for their pur- pose—a deserted house at the end of an unused road, There is one big thing wrong with | Riviere, Gorman and Winant, and} Sherman are on their way home from| They come upon an auto and| just when all hope of getting these | boosting Roosevelt and his program | |of Hunger, Fascism and War. | At the recent Labor Day rally in | Johnstown, Pa., local U.M.W.A. mis- leaders presented demagog Murray |as a relentless fighter for the min- lers. Here was the man, they said, | that was responsible for the $5-7- hour day; a man who had battled with 1,500 coal operators for five solid weeks in Washington, D. C., and who had emerged from that battle victoriously, Well, the election for international officers of the U.M. W.A. is near, so we may well expect these Lewis henchmen to be on the job, glorifying their “heroes,” the miners’ worst enemies, Murray orated at length, and as is his custom, made some statements that are absolutely contrary to his practices. He stated that by cooper- ating with the President we have| achieved a $5 day in place of the $2.50 day. Through this same co- operation we have a 7 hour day in- stead of the 10 or 14 hour day. We | have moved from disorganization to organization. These improvements are all the blessed results of the N.R.A., according to Murray. Fur- | ther, “We [the social-fascist leaders | of the U.M.W.A—Corr.] have sown | the seed for the N.R.A. by introduc- ing the Watson Bill in 1927, and the |Davis Kelly Bill in 1932.” Now the | Johnstown miners know whom to “thank” for the N.R.A. ‘Throughout Murray's address not lone word was spoken concerning the As they followed, both boys were thinking fast. They must get help from their neighbors. But they could not go back over the many miles of roads. The same thought popped in- to the heads, and almost at once each whispered ecitedly, “The Banjo Trail.” “Still got the flashlight, Davy?” Davy felt his pocket. “I forgot all about it, but it’s still here.” ‘The boys ran quickly over the | field that lay behind the house, to the edge of the woods. They found the gate that marked the beginning of the trail. This was an old Indian trail that led right over the moun- tain. Ted and Davy knew the path well. But now, without the flashlight they would have been helpless, it was so dark. Up the steep path they climbed, so fast that the blood pounded in their heads. Breathless, they came to a stop, Then up and up again—a little more till they reached a clearing. Here the whole valley spread itself at their feet. But the boys did not stop to look around. ‘They ran when the path was easier. Everything depended upon how quickly they could get over the mountain, They could not tell how long it took, an hour, perhaps two, THts SHows THE RouTE THAT TED AND DAVY FoLLOWED | in creases were won. After the strike acted (the caitalist way out). As a WITH OUR YOUNG READERS | strike-breaking tactics, the Lewis’ machine completely smashed the U.M.W.A., especially in the Appala- |chian region. The U.M.W.A. was | practically unorganized from 1927 | to 1933; and it was precisely in this | period which the miners received | the most wage cuts in the coal in- | dustry. Lewis and Murray did not | take an encouraging attitude toward reviving the U.M.W.A. They encour- aged the miners to accept wage cuts, because the poor coal operators were not reaping their customary mil- lions. “You can’t win strikes in a period of depression,” cried Lewis and his dupes. Consequently, wage cuts were as frequent as pay-days, misery accumulated, starvation reached deeper strata, lay-offs mul- | tiplied, and unemployment reached the 15,000,000 figure. The miners couldn’t endure these conditions any longer. They were becoming radical- ized. Rank and file unions were | formed. A revolutionary way out was demanded, and huge strikes took place. Only the Communists took a stand | the vanguard of the miners’ | struggles. Then was it that wage | cuts were defeated, and wage in- * of 40,000 miners in 1931, the Ken- tucky strike in 1932 and hundreds of other local strikes in 1932, sentiment for a general coal strike grew rapid- ly. The government was plainly wor- ried, and worked rapidly to check | the growing class-conscious actions of the miners. The N.R.A. was en- dren’s Then just as steep as its ascent, the trail plunged down. It wound itself down the mountain side and finally emerged from the woods not far from a dirt road. “We'll go over to Sam Rogers’ first,” said Ted, as he ducked through a barbed-wire fance. ‘They dashed along the road with one last spurt of energy. Sam Rogers was awakened. In less than no time Ted and Davy were in the truck with Rogers and speeding along. They aroused several farmers. Davy and Ted led the race back over the roads they had taken so unepectedly the first time. About six or seven farmers got out of the cars in the Hollenbeck yard and climbed the hill to Zac’s, Meanwhile up at the house, the men were passing the dark hours in drinking. The jug of liquor made them feel braver. Suddenly one of them said: “I hear something. It sounds like a car.” “Aw, you're drunk! Nobody lives up this road.” “Maybe it’s down in the valley. Sounds travel far. But just the same ...” and he walked dizzily out into the quiet night. A few yards CLOSED By a Worker Correspondent workers in this town carried on the |had the women and a bunch of most militant struggle in our area, | tagged and hungry kids making de- Their strike started as a local strike mands on the relief office. They | mills will be closed up 100 per cent | flying squadron. by strike. Picketing at all mills will confinue to keep them closed. street in front of the theatre to sell }and the coal operators were com-|use of the red scare he ran our | pelled by this strike action to grant | comrade out of town. |the $5-7 hour day. In analyzing this incident, we all) It was only through class strug-j agreed that our comrade shoulid | gle, through militant strike action,|have first walked into the working | that the’ miners won improvement | class struggle talking to workers in their conditions. It is obvious|and quietly selling the paper. After | that Roosevelt, Lewis, Murray and|he had a few contacts and the} their crowd are trying to hide the|Workers had a chance to read the the credit for themselves. That is |forward more boldly. The difference | why Murray, in Johnstown, ignored |i time would have been only a} ‘A ; day, but we would have had con- | x y f history-making mine 3 | breaeevengee hh ait tacts, whereas now we have none. | _ WILLIAMSPORT, Pa.—Six of the | weeks ago. They were the first to/80t immediate results. Our com- | eight textile mills are on strike NOW, | close up the mills in their own town | Mittee met with the chief relief and within three days all eight silk |ang now make up the best of the | office—result: more relief. The way things are working out, Our comrade went into the main | 2d with the success of the district, I think we will have success in the pies igre Bate —.|his papers. The burgess got a gang | Political field, and I believe the | result, in 1933 110,000 miners struck,|0f misguided workers and by the| Party can watch us with interest, N. G COOK, Dove Creek, Colo, Join the Communist Party face of the class struggle and steal|Paper over, he should have come || 3§ E. 12th STREET, N. Y. ©. Please send me more informa- tion on the Communist Party. Conducted by Mary Morrow, Chil- East 13th St., New York City. struggles and tried to make the miners believe that he and his pals were the “master mind” who won the victory over the coal bosses. But the miners do not have such short memories, It isn’t so easy for the social-fascisis to kid them. Brother miners, if we don’t want the Blue Buzzard to swallow up our gains through the rising cost of liv- ing, inflation, etc., we will have to continue our class struggle. Fight to get all locals to pass the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill (H. R. 7598). Elect your class brothers to office and insure our union against being smashed by the Lewis machine. | along the path brought him face to face with the approaching farm- ers. Dumbfounded he stood there, staring at them. Sam Rogers wasted no words. A swift punch from his hard first knocked the thug to the ground. As he staggered up, another farmer dragged him along. Sam and Jake Snyder were the first to enter the open door, their guns levelled. But besides the two prisoners only one man was in the room. “Where are the Snyder angrily. “They're gone away. How did you get here?” Joyfully Ted and Davy rushed to their father, who lay in the corner with Don Elliot. Blood streamed from cuts on their faces. Fowler and Evans had let out their fury before they left. It was easy enough to tie up the drunken, thugs, who offered no re- sistance when they saw that they were outnumbered. As they were being trussed up, one of the thugs muttered, “The dirty rats had no right to leave us here on guard alone.” “Next time,” said Sam Rogers, “yowll know better than go messing around with such rotten business.” “We'll leave you here to tell Fowler for us,” said Snyder, *that he’s lucky he ain’t tied up here too. He'd better watch his step, or he’ll get what's coming to him.” Then they all left the house, leav- ing the exchange of prisoners. As they rode home, there were many words of praise for the quick action the boys had taken. It was nearly morning when Ted and Davy finally got to bed—and it was only then that they remem- bered— “Say Davy; we lost our flishing poles tonight.” “Yes, and our fish too,” said Davy in a sleepy voice. i A BLACKLISTED YOUNG MINER. editor, The Daily Worker, 50 rest?” asked * PUZZLE CORNER Answer to last week's puzzle— Pioneer. New Puzzle Club members are: Herman Mihalic, Renee Braunstein, Toivo Taro, Blanche Yuran, Rhoda Saletén, man, Lily Levy, Vernice Vladimir, Walter Rudin, Darius Brncio, Chester Roistacher, Cohen, Rose Knutson, Irene Rudin, Irene Ruth Frishkopf, May Schneider, Natalie Latb- We will try these second tactics in|] NAME ++++++seereeeeerrseeseeors a few days. i] Street M,, Section Organizer, || Clty eseatet vet tecntaet oar Pennsylvania Textile Area. Hox Senne of $60,000 iinive WINNING TRAILING District District Total Percent to of Date Quota Total Percent to of Date Quota 28 Distriets | $2172.51 | | 427.25 | 12.2 i 12 aN. ¥. ©. 3—Philadelphia ! 5—Pittsburgh I 6—Cleveland 272.41 | 9.6 ‘I—Detroit i | | 4—Buffalo 21 13—Californta, 18—Milwaukee 12—Seattle 18—California 26.00 12—Seattle | | ! | | | i | 19—Denver -A—St. Louls Received Sept, 13 | $187.66 DISTRICT 13 (California) P i baer 58578 unit 1 Long Beach Sub-See, $ 5.00 Total to date 4,083.44 | Russian Workers Choir 50 DISTRICT 1 (Boston) °° **| Workers Press Conferenes 3.50 French Club, Temple, Me. 2.50| H. Holtz 2.60 San Bernardine Sub-Bec. 5.00 : 50| French Workers Club Resdiy i Raniciging § _ 2501 rotal Sept. 18 $20.00 Total to date 419.72 eed rf 2NY. 6. Total to date $26.00 oie 5.00 DISTRICT 7 (Detroit) Sec. 1 Unit 5 H. Berman 25.00] 0. P. Com, Grand Rapids $ 11.20 iden eR = Total Sept. 18 $ 11.29 Foll of Neture Cam 40.00 ers ee lee aba 1.00 | Total to date $187.00 Dorothy Goodman 1.00 DISTRICT 14 (Newark) Sam Moness 1.00} 64; Polish I. L. D. $ 5.00 Lehre ll 300| Tettish Branches I. L. D. 23.00 Collected by M. Ginsberg 400 eis y ee Total Sept. 13 $1.25 | otal Sept. 13 ¢ "30.00 Total to date $1,860.93 70.78 DISTRICT 4 (Buffalo) Me aria! se a i French Olub, ‘Trumansburg $ 10.00 DISERION | 38. (Deere Unit 7 fae is 10.00} Unit 13 Total Sept. 18 ’ Tale io Total to date $ 21.96] Unit 5 B30 DISTRICT & (Chicago) Unit 2 30 A. Steinberg $ 115] L. D. 8. Branch 77 10. Total Sept. 18 $ 1.15] Total Sept. 18 $25.47 Total to date $ 254.76Total to date $ 113.02 Here Is My Bit Toward the $60,000! To help the Daily Worker launch its three editions, two New York Editions of 8 pages, the improved National Edition of 6 pages (8 Saturday), I enclose my contribution. NAME ADDRESS AMOUNT a ee Tear off and mail immediately to DAILY WORKER 50 EAST 13th St. New York, N. ¥.

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